Q2 2026 StepStone Group Inc Earnings Call
Speaker #2: Hello and welcome to Q2 2026 Earnings Conference Call . At this time , all participants are in a listen only mode . After the speaker's presentation , there will be a question and answer session .
Speaker #2: To ask a question during the session, you will need to press *1 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised.
Speaker #2: To withdraw your question , please press star one one again . Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded . I would now like to hand the conference over to Seth Weiss , Head of Investor StepStone Group Inc. .
Speaker #2: Please go ahead .
Speaker #3: Thank you and good evening . Joining me on today's call are Scott Hart chief Executive Officer Jason Mente , president and Co-Chief operating officer Mike McCabe , head of strategy .
Speaker #3: And David Park chief financial Officer . During our prepared remarks , we will be referring to a presentation which is available on our Investor Relations website at StepStone Group Inc. .
Speaker #3: Before we begin , I'd like to remind everyone that this conference call , as well as the presentation , contains certain forward looking statements regarding the company's expected operating and financial performance for future periods .
Speaker #3: Forward looking statements reflect management's current plans , estimates and expectations and are inherently uncertain and are subject to various risks , uncertainties and assumptions .
Speaker #3: Actual results for future periods may differ materially from those expressed or implied forward looking statements . Due to changes in circumstances or a number of risks or other factors that are described in the risk Factors section of stepsons .
Speaker #3: Periodic filings . These forward looking statements are made only as of today , and , except as required . We undertake no obligation to update or revise any of them .
Speaker #3: Today's presentation contains references to non-GAAP financial measures , reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are included in our earnings release .
Speaker #3: Our presentation and our filings with the SEC . Turning to our financial results for the second quarter of fiscal 2026 , beginning with slide three , we reported a GAAP net loss attributable to Stepstone Group incorporated of $366 million , or $4.66 per share , as a reminder , GAAP accounting requires us to factor the change in fair value of the buy in of the Stepstone private Wealth profits interests to our income statement .
Speaker #3: This option is expected to be accretive to EPs , and we plan to exercise the call option as soon as it's available in September of 2027 .
Speaker #3: This quarter's GAAP loss was significantly larger than prior periods and is a direct function of the progress of our private wealth platform , which Scott will speak to in more detail .
Speaker #3: Moving to slide five , we generated fee related earnings of $79 million , up 9% from the prior year quarter . And we generated an Fra margin of 36% .
Speaker #3: The quarter reflected retroactive fees from our infrastructure . Secondaries fund . Retroactive fees contributed $0.3 million to revenue , which compares to retroactive fees of $14.9 million in the second quarter of the prior fiscal year when excluding the impact of fees .
Speaker #3: Core fee related earnings were $78 million , up 34% to the prior year quarter , and core free margin remains at 36% . We earned $66.7 million in adjusted net income for the quarter , or $0.54 per share .
Speaker #3: This is up from $53.6 million , or $0.45 per share , in the second quarter of the last fiscal year , driven by higher performance related earnings and higher core fee related earnings .
Speaker #3: I'll now hand the call over to Scott .
Speaker #4: Thank you Steph . Our second quarter was strong on all fronts . We continued to deliver for our clients both in the form of strong investment performance and value added services .
Speaker #4: We produced a record quarter of subscriptions within our private wealth platform . We generated robust institutional fundraising within both managed accounts and focused commingled funds .
Speaker #4: We generated strong financial results and we continue to enhance our data and technology offerings and partnerships . Starting with private Wealth , where our momentum is nothing short of spectacular .
Speaker #4: We generated $2.4 billion of new subscriptions , a record result for Stepstone and nearly double our previous highest quarter . There are several drivers of the strength this quarter .
Speaker #4: First , we continue to generate growth on our existing suite of products . Spring , our venture and growth fund was a standout this quarter with over $800 million in new subscriptions .
Speaker #4: It's a true one of a kind product whose popularity is continuing to grow . Second , we launched step , a pure play private equity fund that enables daily subscription through a ticker .
Speaker #4: We constructed step to address the request of several channel partners , leading to over $700 million in gross subscriptions in the first 30 days .
Speaker #4: This is an incredible result that , frankly , exceeded our own expectations . While subscriptions will moderate after this initial surge , we expect step to become a significant source of private wealth inflows .
Speaker #4: Third , we are accelerating internationally as we continue to build on our syndicate , establish a our international funds , and grow the Stepstone brand .
Speaker #4: Last month , we were thrilled to announce a partnership with Aviva to be one of five specialist managers in its UK trust based pension scheme .
Speaker #4: We believe this solidifies the Stepstone name as a trusted partner in private markets for retirement savings , a trend we expect to develop globally .
Speaker #4: Moving to institutional . This was another solid quarter for fund raising within both managed accounts and commingled funds . We generated $3.8 billion in managed account gross additions in the quarter , and over $10 billion for the first half of our fiscal year , continuing the momentum from our record setting track record of fundraising last year , our strength in managed accounts has been a differentiator for Stepstone and as a result of nearly two decades of investment and relationship building across the globe , we are generating a healthy mix of new mandates as well as retention and growth in existing mandates .
Speaker #4: Over the last 12 months , more than a third of our managed account inflows have come from new and expanded relationships , which not only contribute to gross inflows today , but plants the seeds for growth as those LPs re-up with us in the future .
Speaker #4: As we have consistently said since our IPO over five years ago, we are very proud of our success with existing clients. Our rate remains above 90%, and on average, those re-upped accounts have grown in each successive vintage at nearly 30%.
Speaker #4: These are incredibly strong numbers and are even more powerful when you consider the compounding growth that results . When we get to the second , third , and fourth re-up cycles .
Speaker #4: Stepstone success with both new and existing clients is the result of strong investment performance and the high level of service we provide a key means of achieving this is by placing senior and experienced professionals in the asset classes and geographies where our limited partners reside .
Speaker #4: Over the last six months , we have opened new offices in the Netherlands , Spain , South Korea and Saudi Arabia , representing increasing footholds for Stepstone in Europe , Asia and the Middle East , and highlighting the importance of our partnership with key clients in those regions .
Speaker #4: Pivoting to commingled funds , we generated $3.4 billion of gross additions in addition to record private wealth subscriptions . We executed the first close of our PE co-investment fund .
Speaker #4: We are also now in the market with our PE secondaries fund , which invests in both LP and GP led secondaries , and with a first time dedicated , GP led private equity secondaries fund .
Speaker #4: Mike will speak about these funds in more detail . The fundraising momentum has led to continued growth in our fee earning AUM , which is up more than $5.5 billion in the quarter to nearly $133 billion .
Speaker #4: The strong progression of AUM translates to growing earnings power we generated $78 million of core fee related earnings , representing 34% year over year growth on the strategic front , we are continuing to make strides in leveraging our data and technology .
Speaker #4: In September , we announced the launch of the Kroll Stepstone Private Credit Benchmarks . These benchmarks and analytic tools provide up to date data and analysis on a wide pool of loans , with insights down to the loan level .
Speaker #4: Last week , we were pleased to announce the launch of the FTSE Stepstone Global Private Market indices . We are beginning with three indices a US buyout index , a U.S.
Speaker #4: infrastructure index and an all private markets index , which offer daily index performance based on comprehensive institutional grade inputs . We believe this lays the groundwork for additional indices across other sectors and asset classes , and ultimately for establishing index tracking , investment products .
Speaker #4: I'll now turn the call over to Mike .
Speaker #5: Thanks , Scott . Turning to slide eight . We generated $29 billion of gross AUM additions over the last 12 months . $18 billion of these inflows came from separately managed accounts , and $11 billion came from our commingled funds , including private wealth .
Speaker #5: During the quarter , we generated over $7 billion in gross additions , including approximately $4 billion of managed account inflows and approximately $3 billion of commingled fund inflows .
Speaker #5: Notable commingled fund additions included $150 million final close for our corporate direct Lending fund , and a $550 million close at our PE co-investment fund .
Speaker #5: As Scott mentioned, we are now back in market with our PE secondaries fund, and we are also in market with a debut GP-led PE secondaries fund.
Speaker #5: The flagship secondaries fund will continue to invest across a diversified array of both LP led and GP led investments , while the dedicated GP led fund will provide access to a more concentrated set of high quality , GP led investments .
Speaker #5: We expect first closes in these funds by the end of our fiscal year . The GP led dedicated fund will be smaller than the flagship secondaries fund , but we anticipate the combination of both funds will increase over the prior vintage size of $4.8 billion .
Speaker #5: Turning to our Evergreen Fund platform , we generated $2.4 billion of subscriptions and our private wealth suite of offerings growing the platform to $12 billion as of the end of the quarter .
Speaker #5: Additionally , we have grown our evergreen Non-traded BDC s cred to over $1.5 billion in net assets . We have expanded our private wealth platform to approximately 650 individual distribution partners , and among our partners that have been with us on the platform for at least a year , 50% are selling more than one evergreen product .
Speaker #5: Slide nine shows our fee earning AUM by structure and asset class for the quarter , we increased fee earning assets by nearly $6 billion , or an annualized growth rate of 18% .
Speaker #5: Our undeployed fee earning capital or Ufec , grew by over $1 billion to nearly $30 billion . The combination of fee earning assets plus ufec , grew to approximately $163 billion , which is up $7 billion sequentially and is up over $28 billion from a year ago .
Speaker #5: This translates to a healthy 20% annual organic growth rate since fiscal 2021 . Slide ten shows our evolution of fee revenues . We generated a blended management fee rate of 63 basis points over the last 12 months .
Speaker #5: Down slightly from the 65 basis points in fiscal year 2025 , driven by the moderation and retroactive fees . Before turning the call over to David , I would like to briefly address recent capital market trends and client sentiment .
Speaker #5: While private market returns have stayed strong , distributions have been low for three consecutive years , shifting client focus from IRR to DPI .
Speaker #5: Slower exits have led to fund raising declines industrywide , and 2025 could see another down year unless fundraising picks up in Q4 . Stepsons results .
Speaker #5: However , stand out , raising nearly $30 billion annually over the last two years . A significant jump from previous years . We credit this growth to our client focused , customized approach and our data driven insights as a major market participant , clients worldwide , including those who attended our largest ever Stepstone 360 conference , have echoed this feedback , we believe current low distributions and private markets are temporary indicators like increased IPOs , rising investment banking activity , and a major recent buyout point toward better realizations ahead .
Speaker #5: Our analysis finds . Bid ask spreads narrowing , improving sentiment and a growing pipeline of future transactions . Despite geopolitical and market challenges , we're committed to monitoring conditions and providing solutions for clients in all environments .
Speaker #5: With that , I'll hand it over to David for our financial results .
Speaker #6: Thanks , Mike . Turning to slide 12 . We earned fee revenues of $217 million , up 17% from the prior year quarter .
Speaker #6: Excluding retroactive fees , which were very small this quarter . Revenues grew by 27% year over year . The increase was driven by growth in fee earning AUM across commercial structures .
Speaker #6: Fee related earnings were $79 million , up 9% from a year ago , while core FR was up 34% sequentially . Free declined slightly , driven primarily by lower retroactive fees and lower advisory fees .
Speaker #6: Advisory fees of $16 million were reload the elevated $20 million level of the prior two quarters , which benefited from a higher than normal level of project based fees .
Speaker #6: We view this quarter as a more normalized level of advisory fees in the near term , margin was 36% for the quarter , both on a reported and core basis .
Speaker #6: Core free margin moderated slightly as compared to last quarter due to lower project based advisory fees shifting to expenses adjusted cash based compensation was $100 million , representing a cash compensation ratio of 46% , in line with the expectation we set out at the beginning of the fiscal year .
Speaker #6: In general and administrative expenses were $34 million , up $2 million from last quarter . The sequential increase was driven by higher travel .
Speaker #6: IT and other general operating expenses . As a reminder , the name of our next two quarters tends to be seasonally elevated , driven by our Stepstone 360 conference in October and our venture capital conference in February .
Speaker #6: Gross realized performance fees were $65 million and $34 million , net of related compensation expense . We expect strong gross performance fees next quarter , driven by the annual crystallization of incentive fees in our spring Evergreen Fund .
Speaker #6: As a reminder , a relatively small portion of spring incentive fees drops to the bottom line after accounting for performance fee compensation and the private wealth profits interest adjusted net income per share of $0.54 was up from $0.45 a year ago , and $0.40 last quarter , driven by growth across fee related and performance related earnings .
Speaker #6: Moving to key items on the balance sheet on slide 13 . Net accrued carry finished the quarter at $842 million , up 8% from last quarter .
Speaker #6: Our net accrued carry is relatively mature , approximately 70% are tied to programs that are older than five years , which means that these programs are ready to harvest our own investment portfolio ended the quarter at $314 million .
Speaker #6: This concludes our prepared remarks . I'll now turn it back over to the operator to open the line for any questions .
Speaker #2: Thank you . At this time , we will conduct the question and answer session . As a reminder to ask a question , you will need to press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced .
Speaker #2: To withdraw your question , please press star one one again . Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster . Our first question comes from the line of Alexander Blostein from .
Speaker #2: Goldman .
Speaker #7: Hey , good afternoon guys . This is Anthony on for Alex . I wanted to click into the recently launched P product step , which saw a very strong first 30 days of fundraising .
Speaker #7: So was curious what drove such strong demand here and how do you think about any cannibalization risk with your existing product suite ? Thanks .
Speaker #8: Thanks , Anthony . prepared remarks , the product was designed specifically in response to demand from several channel partners who highlighted a couple of things .
Speaker #8: One , they were looking for PE exclusive exposure as opposed to the model portfolio . That's in S prime . And two , we talked about it previously , but S Prime's ticker was not available on all custodians .
Speaker #8: And certain of our channel partners overindexed to the custodians that were not allowing the ticker for S Prime , and the ticker was very important to them .
Speaker #8: So that was we think the main drivers of the initial uptake , i.e. it was developed in response to demand we knew was there in terms of cannibalization .
Speaker #8: We did see some rotation out of s prime and into step , and that was planned for in advance . And we knew that was coming .
Speaker #8: But we think we've seen the majority of that rotation occur already in the initial the initial month here .
Speaker #7: That's helpful . Thanks .
Speaker #2: Thank you . Our next question comes from the line of Kenneth Worthington from J.P. Morgan . Your line is now open .
Speaker #9: Hi . Good evening . Thanks for taking the question . I'll continue on wealth . So you've got five flagship products now . Can you talk about next steps to broaden and deepen distribution ?
Speaker #9: So maybe number one you've got 650 distribution partners . How far along are you through selling through either the biggest or your target distribution partners .
Speaker #9: How much room do you have to run for for for the big ones . And then two , I think , Mike , to your comments , 50% or 50% of your distribution partners are selling more than one evergreen product .
Speaker #9: I assume that the the dream would be to get 650 distribution partners to sell all five . So maybe bridge where you are today and the maybe unrealistic dream scenario of getting everybody to sell everything .
Speaker #9: How do you bridge that gap ? Thanks .
Speaker #8: Don't kill our dreams , Ken . This is Jason . In terms of the 50% statistic that Mike cited during the prepared remarks , that 50% is those that have been that have had a product on platform for more than one year .
Speaker #8: And so we're always adding new partners . And so that presents additional cross-sell . That'll that'll happen over time with those groups to your point , the 50% cited is , you know , an aggregate of those selling two , three , 4 or 5 of the funds , as you would imagine , that number selling all five funds is less than that .
Speaker #8: Selling two funds, etc. So we've got plenty of room to run in that regard. We are also always focused on ensuring that we're meeting each channel partner exactly where they are.
Speaker #8: So we don't expect that all channel partners would want or need all five funds , given their different client bases . Of course , as we look at the largest of our distribution partners , most of those really large groups are not selling all five funds for sure .
Speaker #8: And are really focused on , you know , 2 or 3 funds at present . So there's still room there as well .
Speaker #10: Okay . Okay , great . I'll leave it there . Thank you .
Speaker #2: Thank you . Question comes the line of Brennan Hawken of BMO . Your line is now open .
Speaker #11: Hi . Good afternoon . Thanks for taking my question . I believe you made a comment about step . This new product that you launched and that maybe the strong subscription rate above expectations .
Speaker #11: And it seemed like you were suggesting it's above your expectations for what the run rate is . Did those subscriptions sort of like , flatter this overall ESP subscriptions in the quarter ?
Speaker #11: And should we expect a pullback on the back of that ? Just trying to get an understanding of fully contextualizing those comments . Thanks .
Speaker #8: Sure . So so step in in the initial month was around 750 million of subscriptions . We would not expect that to be the run rate for the fund in the near term .
Speaker #8: Going forward . And so , yes , we would expect a quarterly pullback from this past quarter due to that one time . You know , initial subscription surge from the launch .
Speaker #11: Great . Thanks for that . And then G&A expenses were a little higher than we were looking for . Can you talk about maybe what drove some of that quarter over quarter increase and how much of that would be expected to be durable going forward ?
Speaker #11: Thanks .
Speaker #6: Yeah , thanks for the questions , David . I think in the prepared remarks , we had mentioned that the quarter over quarter increase was largely driven by travel .
Speaker #6: It and just general operating costs . And , you know , you've heard us talk about data and tech benchmarks . The new office openings we've had .
Speaker #6: So you know , we continue to invest in our business for growth . So I think as you see , you know , top line continue to grow .
Speaker #6: We're going to continue to invest in infrastructure and other costs . There for the next couple of quarters . Like we said in the prepared remarks , you should expect to step up in the costs for our Stepstone 360 conference .
Speaker #6: This for the next quarter and the fiscal fourth quarter . You see see some costs for the DC conference there . If you look at last year , the Stepstone 360 conference was actually held in September .
Speaker #6: So it's not really a good proxy . But if you look back a couple years to fiscal 24 and you can see the step up from fiscal 22 to 3 and four , that should be a better proxy of what you should expect to see in the next couple quarters .
Speaker #8: Great .
Speaker #11: Thanks for taking my questions .
Speaker #2: Thank you . Our next question comes from the line of Ben Budish from Barclays . Your line is now open .
Speaker #12: Hi . Good evening and thanks for taking my question . Maybe first , Scott , I think in your prepared remarks , you mentioned the partnership with Aviva that was announced maybe a month or so ago .
Speaker #12: Can you talk a little bit about what you're doing there ? You know , how big is the potential opportunity and how do you see maybe other opportunities to participate in the retirement channel ?
Speaker #12: You know , perhaps unfolding outside the US ?
Speaker #8: Hey , Ben . Jason here , with respect to the UK opportunity , it's obviously a very big market in terms of defined contribution market .
Speaker #8: There . Aviva is one of the top five players . So we're we're ecstatic to be one of their partners . The initiation of that that channel , we don't expect to see material flows .
Speaker #8: This calendar year . So think of that as a calendar 26 event . And it's going to build over time . This is a new area for Aviva and we're going to have to see how it develops as they roll it across their book .
Speaker #8: Outside of the UK market , we are having conversations in those geographies where it's potentially conducive to include private markets in the defined contribution space , and obviously spending a lot of time focused on the US opportunity as well .
Speaker #8: But this is all very early days . Obviously .
Speaker #12: Got it . Thanks for that , Jason . Maybe a separate follow up just on the indexes . So so it's nice to see a number of products now launched .
Speaker #12: Can you maybe talk about from here . What does the path look like to more commercial relationships . How do these get monetized ?
Speaker #12: I imagine that is still far off as well , but with the products out there , just curious what what next steps look like on that path .
Speaker #12: Thank you .
Speaker #5: Thanks , Ben . Mike . Here . Just as a reminder . You know , our data and technology platform really revolves around our proprietary , our proprietary technology that we call spy , which has four use cases , primarily being one , driving our investment decisions and track record .
Speaker #5: Two , enabling our existing clients to make better decisions around asset allocation and portfolio construction , as well as monitoring returns . The third use case is to develop new client and LP relationships by offering Spy as a value added service .
Speaker #5: But last but not least , relating to your your question . You know , we're using data and technology to power our benchmarking indices and analytical tools for data partnerships like the one we announced with FTSE Russell and Kroll .
Speaker #5: To be clear , our posture toward benchmarking indices is quite a bit different than than others in the marketplace . You know , first is , you know , we're using our data to develop and power these benchmarks from a very comprehensive database that includes venture capital , private equity , infrastructure , real estate and credit .
Speaker #5: The second is the indices that we announced with FTSE Russell are priced daily , meaning cash adjusted and market adjusted on a daily basis .
Speaker #5: And as a reminder , we've had quite a bit of experience with a daily priced product by virtue of our ticker Ise evergreen product called S Prime .
Speaker #5: The commercialization of all of this comes in lots of different forms , but as it relates to the indices , you know , the initial revenue case is a licensing opportunity in partnership with FTSE Russell that will be shared between the two organizations longer term .
Speaker #5: The potential use case for building asset management products around our reference benchmarks is on the come . But to be clear . Not a replication strategy .
Speaker #5: Rather , we see asset management products around these indices being a much longer term opportunity , which is why on previous calls I've described this as more of a walk before you run , approach .
Speaker #5: But but we believe there is plenty of opportunity out there to develop some asset management products around these indices . In the longer term .
Speaker #12: Okay , great . Thank you for that . Mike .
Speaker #5: Thanks , Ben .
Speaker #2: Thank you . Our next question comes from the line of Michael Cypress from Morgan Stanley . Your line is now open .
Speaker #13: Hey good afternoon . Thanks for taking the question . Just given all the success in the private Wealth channel , I was hoping you could speak to how you're expanding your sourcing deal , sourcing capabilities to put all this capital to work .
Speaker #13: So it does not compromise returns for the retail customers , as well as for the institutional accounts and customers that you managing assets .
Speaker #13: How are you thinking about that ?
Speaker #4: Hey , Mike Scott here . Look , it's a great question . And something that whether driven by the growth of the wealth business or the growth of the separate account business or the co-mingled fund business that we have always been very , very focused on .
Speaker #4: And , you know , really comes down to , you know , the the flywheel and the amount of capital that we are committing across the private markets ecosystem , really starting with primary fund commitments that are a big driver of ultimately , the deal flow .
Speaker #4: And our position in the market , also a big driver of the data and the information that we have to inform our decision making .
Speaker #4: So one of the things that we have always had to do is to make sure that the various different elements of our , of our deal flow remain , remain balanced .
Speaker #4: And one of the ways that I've often thought about that is , whereas you may have some investors in the market that are looking for , for example , a dollar of free co-invest for every dollar of primary capital they commit , you know , we offer a very different and a more appealing , you know , ratio to our GP partners , which is that across the board , we have been allocating about $70 billion per year into the private markets .
Speaker #4: If I take just private equity , for example , represents about 35 billion , with a few billion going into co-investments each year , probably 5 to 6 billion going into secondaries .
Speaker #4: But the rest into primary funds . And so that , in my mind , is a very balanced approach . But I think maintaining the activity on the primary side in particular , is one way we balance that .
Speaker #4: I would say the other thing that we keep a very close eye on is just the conversion or the approval rates across across our deal flow .
Speaker #4: And so one of the ways that we have been able to invest successfully over time here is that the pipeline has been growing significantly .
Speaker #4: You think about different parts of our of our business , for example , private equity secondaries , where you had a record year at $160 billion of volume last year , expected to grow to $200 billion this year .
Speaker #4: Our approval rates , particularly on LP secondaries , is very low single digit percentage and is kind of remained there for a period of time .
Speaker #4: So across each of our strategies , each of our asset classes , those are the types of stats that we are constantly monitoring to make sure that we have sufficient deal flow to maintain that selective that selective ratio .
Speaker #13: Great . Thanks . And just a follow up question on the private wealth channel . Curious how you're seeing expect your product set to evolve over the next 12 to 24 months from the five products that you have today ?
Speaker #13: What other solutions product vehicle strategies could make sense ? Maybe you could update us on some of your thoughts and progress around models in the Private Wealth channel .
Speaker #13: You've had a lot of success with ticker . I'm curious what might be next . As you think about innovation .
Speaker #8: So in terms of the the core portfolios or products that we're putting together , we think that the ones that we have available today are are the ones we'll have available for the next 12 , 24 months .
Speaker #8: And it'll be a doubling down on distribution . But as you alluded to , let's call it the wrapping paper around that . And models being a good example of it , but not the only one .
Speaker #8: We continue to have very engaging dialogue on inclusion in existing model programs , most of which are , in the common parlance , paper models , although some are dynamically reallocating as well and continuing to have conversations with some technology innovators that are really looking to bring private markets into the model world .
Speaker #8: In a really robust way , and we're we're one of the thought partners around how to do that operationally , because it really , at this point is more an operational challenge as opposed to a , you know , a CIO challenge in the models world .
Speaker #13: Just one follow up to that point . Just curious what the time frame might be for inclusion in models and how you see some of those hurdles being overcome .
Speaker #8: Yeah , well , we're already included and we've seen very modest . But , you know , double digit millions of flows , inception to date within the models already using our existing products .
Speaker #8: So that's not a separate portfolio . It's the existing wealth . Products . It was one of the drivers for the creation of step backs as well , is to have that pure play private equity exposure for CIOs to be able to fine tune within a model structure in terms of the technology developments , you know , the systems that many of these models rely on didn't contemplate the idea of , let's call it delayed gratification .
Speaker #8: On on redemption and putting the orders in and having that settle later . And so there's that's one example of where the technology solutions need to work out the pipes , so to speak , to make that all work properly so that everything flows through .
Speaker #13: Great . Thank you .
Speaker #2: Thank you . Our next question comes from the line of John Dunn of Evercore . Your line is now open .
Speaker #14: Thank you . I wonder if you could talk to any different . You know , areas of geographical strength and any differences between , you know , strategy , preferences among the region .
Speaker #4: Hey , John , sure happy to touch on the geographical areas of strength . And you heard us make a couple of comments about some of the new office openings , specifically in the Middle East and parts of Europe .
Speaker #4: And we've had some recent ones in Asia as well . Those would probably be the geographies I would call out . I mean , if you look at in our earnings presentation , how the geographic mix has evolved over time , you will actually see that the US is starting to represent a slightly larger percentage than historically .
Speaker #4: Part of that is driven by the growth in wealth . But if I break it down in just focus , for example , on separately managed accounts , really over the last quarter , or if I look at it over the last 12 month period in order of size , it would have been Middle East Asia .
Speaker #4: And then pretty balanced across Europe , Australia and the US . So look , I think it's broad based . It's not any one geography that is driving the success .
Speaker #4: But continued development across various different regions here in terms of the specific asset classes or strategies . Again , it's been fairly , fairly balanced .
Speaker #4: I think the main thing I would call out , though , and you maybe having had the chance to travel with our private credit leadership team over the last , over the last several months , I'd say the , you know , the interest that we are seeing , particularly out of Asia and some of the Asian insurance companies and in the Middle East , where , you know certain asset owners may just be setting up a private credit allocation for the for the first time , as opposed to managing out of other other asset classes , be it fixed income , be it private equity , etc.
Speaker #4: . And so that's maybe the one thing I would call out is just the interest we are seeing in private credit . In a couple of those markets .
Speaker #14: Great . Thank you .
Speaker #2: Thank you . At this time I'm showing no further questions in the queue . I would now like to hand it back to Scott for closing remarks .
Speaker #4: Great . Just wanted to thank everyone for joining today and appreciate your continued interest in the Stepstones story . We look forward to connecting again next quarter .
Speaker #4: Thank you .